The Middle Ages: You think you have problems? We all do. So hereâs to the tender moments
We all need that one thing â whether itâs libraries or gin joints, pickle ball or chess â that brings us a measure of comfort. For me, itâs a daily workout, sometimes with the wolf-dog in tow. She is younger, faster, better looking, which I realize is almost impossible to imagine.
But if I didnât exercise, Iâd be dead in a week. So off we go into the wild.
Hereâs a typical scenario: The wolf-dog and I round the corner, where we encounter a neighbor I donât know backing out of his driveway, oblivious to our presence. I wait, impatiently, because thatâs how I do most things, with no trace of decency or understanding.
Such is life in the big city, waiting for people you donât know to do things more slowly than youâd like. I curse the driverâs meekness, his hesitation in backing out of his driveway, for I sometimes see that same meekness in myself, and I donât care for it much.
As I wait, White Fang â big as a pony â shows an eagerness to move forward with her life. To settle her, I snap her leash, which she instinctively takes to mean âMush!â given her snow-country heritage.
Ouch, my shoulder, my neck. The moment is a little dark. Nearby, a crow complains.
But we manage, disdaining this driver we donât know who takes forever to back out of his driveway.
Eventually, we step off again, and as the driver passes he slows and rolls down his window.
âGood Thanksgiving?â he asks.
âThe best,â I say. âYou?â
âVery good,â he says. âHave a great weekend.â
So there you go, the hot and cold of city life. A small gesture, a kind and unexpected word. Such encounters change everything ⌠your mood, your outlook, the soft underbelly of your soul.
Still, I donât know why it took him so long to back out of the danged driveway. I mean, it was his own driveway.
And in truth, it wasnât âthe bestâ Thanksgiving, thatâs just one of those things you say for the sake of expediency. It was a good Thanksgiving, to be sure. Posh is on the DL, and we did the best we could, considering. No one throws a Thanksgiving like she does. But we pulled on our best oven mitts and went to work.
Play ball!
The lovely and patient older daughter cooked a big turkey, and Rapunzel baked a pie. The older daughterâs boyfriend made mashed potatoes from scratch, driving his shoulder into them like a good fullback.
Rapunzelâs boyfriend, the engineer, made an apple coffee cake. The little guy spilled his drink. The old beagle piddled near the front door.
So, in a sense, everyone contributed.
The Halloween candy wasnât even gone, so one season bumped up against another. We watched the parade, then some football. Someone poured a meaty red wine. Tasted like Rome.
A holiday feast is exhausting, thereâs no doubt about that. You can wear off your fingers scrubbing pans in the overheated kitchen, and thereâs always a dirty glass or gravy boat someone forgot.
âToday, letâs not worry about the little things,â I told everyone.
âYeah, letâs just throw the dishes away,â suggested the boy.
We didnât, so the cleanup lasted hours. We crammed the leftovers into two refrigerators that were already a little too full.
Thatâs where the leftovers will sit till Christmas, when weâll rush to clean it out to make room for more leftovers weâll probably never finish.
We seem to keep things from one season to the next â Snickers bars and stuffing â as mementos of a full and crazy life.
As for Posh? She is our inspiration â a strong and brave woman working through her horrible cancer while not close to being done with her earlier awful grief.
My wife spent the day before Thanksgiving getting blood while wearing a tacky âPardon My Frenchâ sweatshirt her older daughter gave her as a joke.
âWear it,â Iâd urged. âYou speak a lot of *%&^%$#* French.â
In the transfusion room, Rapunzel blew in like a Sierra storm and curled up next to her mother in the bed. At the holiday table, we left a place card for our late son.
Such a year itâs been. Two deaths in the family â Poshâs mother, our older son â and now the recurrence of this unspeakable disease.
During my morning run, I see that the trees are finally bright gold. Where I once thought I saw some divine glory in bright branches, Iâm starting to see mere sunlight.
You think you have problems? Yes, probably so. As the bus signs say, âEveryoneâs dealing with something.â
So in the spirit of our best season, we send you kind thoughts and prayers.
And, yes, weâll always pardon your French.
Twitter: @erskinetimes